MW: Euro pares loss; Trichet gives Portugal a break
Australian jobs, U.S. data, Bank of England meetings share focus
By Deborah Levine and William L. Watts, MarketWatch
NEW YORK (MarketWatch) — The euro fell against the dollar on Thursday after European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet said the bank would suspend its minimum rating requirement to accept collateral from Portugal for loans.
Separately, the dollar gained against the Japanese yen after solid U.S. jobs data, and the Australian dollar rallied on the back of that nation’s own strong employment data.
The euro EURUSD +0.36% fell to $1.4269 from $1.4303 in late New York trading on Wednesday.
The dollar index DXY -0.16% , which measures the U.S. unit’s value against a basket of six major currencies, rose to 75.222 from 75.088 late in New York.
In recent days, the 17-nation shared currency was pressured after Moody’s Investors Service’s downgraded Portugal to junk status, triggering fresh concern about European sovereign-debt issues. Read more about European sovereign-debt worries.
The ECB raised its key lending rate to 1.5% from 1.25% earlier, as had been widely predicted. Read ECB rate decision preview
The euro had fallen to $1.4220 earlier in his news conference as Trichet noted a continuation of upside risks to price stability but the latest rate increase will anchor inflation expectations. The ECB’s primary policy goal is to keep inflation low.
The question-and-answer session of his monthly news conference was expected to be dominated by questions surrounding the euro-zone’s long-running debt crisis and efforts by banks and European officials to fashion some type of rollover of Greek-government debt without triggering a default designation from major credit-rating companies.
Trichet reiterated that the ECB remains opposed to a selective default, implying it may not be able to offer any further support to Greece if a rollover or bailout plan is deemed a default.
Many currency strategists expect Trichet to deter expectations of another rate hike soon to see whether the sovereign-debt problems still plaguing Greece spread to other countries.
Still, he sounded “less dovish than some may have expected and leaves the door open for further hikes,” said analysts at Action Economics.
U.S. jobs data
The dollar extended gains against the euro and Japanese yen after a pair of positive reports on the U.S. jobs market, from ADP and the government. They come a day before the Labor Department’s eagerly awaited monthly nonfarm payrolls report for June. Read story on ADP.
The ADP report “will build a positive tone for the dollar ahead of Friday’s official government report, which is a broader reading of the health of the economy,” said Andrew Wilkinson, senior market analyst at Interactive Brokers.
Against the Japanese yen, the dollar USDJPY +0.42% bought ¥81.33, up from ¥80.94 in New York.
Australian job gains
The Australian dollar climbed against the greenback after official data showed a sharp increase in full-time employment. Read full story on Australia’s employment data.
The Australian unit AUDUSD +0.61% traded at $1.0752, rising off the day’s low of $1.0684.
But the dollar was trading higher against the British pound, which stayed under pressure after the Bank of England left its policy rate unchanged, as expected.
The pound GBPUSD -0.15% fell to $1.5978 from $1.5993 late Wednesday.
Deborah Levine is a MarketWatch reporter, based in New York.
William L. Watts is a reporter for MarketWatch in Frankfurt. Varahabhotla Phani Kumar in Hong Kong contributed to this report.